Gluing mirror to wood

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paulc

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Hello , can anyone advise me as to whats the best glue to use in gluing mirror glass to MDF & wood , any feedback appreciated , cheers
 
As Travis's excellent link indicates, Silicone. I've also used Construction Adhesive, which works very well too. Nail a batton or some other type of support below the mirror until the adhesive cures.

Noel
 
Silicon will work but proper mirror adhesive is better, this comes in a standard mastic tube and costs about £5, get it from any glaziers or Screwfix do one. The solvents in some silicons can attack the coating.

Apply it in parallel lines approx 150mm long then a small gap, then another line etc. as it is important not to trap any air behind the mirror, the lines & gaps will let it breath ( more important is fixing in a bathroom)

If it is in a moist enviroment get the back of the mirror foiled.

Jason
 
good tips, I'm going to be making a large oak framed mirror soon and was thinking of attaching the hook loops to a sheet of ply, then the mirror to the ply and building the frame around the ply and glass, instead of attaching the hook loops to the frame and having a lot of weight pushing down on the bottom of the frame.

would contact glue work aswell? instead of using a mastic style glue which has the possiblity of a few small air gaps between the lines, I was thinking before reading this thread to use contact glue spread on the ply, basically the same stuff that was used to vaneer the ends of a kitchen worktop.

http://www.wickes.co.uk/Wickes-High-Str ... l/p/241101
 
I was faced with this very problem a few months ago, i asked the glazer who supplied the mirror and ended up using Geocel Mirror fix from Screwfix, cost me about £7.
 
I bought my bathroom mirror online and they recommended mirror adhesive because normal stuff attacks the foil back, so I used that.

My wall was nowhere near vertical though, sloping about 12mm over the 60cm height of the mirror, so I used ply blocks and spacers screwed to the wall first, then glued to that. Supported at the bottom with tile spacers onto the tiles below while the adhesive set and it's rock solid. Grouting the gap then stops any movement for the full belt and braces.

I used (a lot) of caulk to fill the gap behind the mirror towards the top, which has marked one corner a tiny bit, so definitely beware of non-approved chemicals!

Incidentally, before I fitted the mirror I dropped it and cracked the corner, so bought a new one. I recently made a jewlery cabinet using the mirror as the front, with spare bits of ash from a wardrobe project. The mirror has a bevel on it, that meant it had to be recessed into the frame by 20mm. It was only when I'd cut up the 45mm wide strips of ash for the frame that I realised I had no means of cutting a 20mm deep stopped slot in the ash that was 4mm wide.

I wasn't overly confident, but as a last resort I routed the recess into the back of the ash frame and then used the rest of the mirror adhesive to glue the mirror into the frame. It's a 600 x 400 mirror, so pretty heavy, with a slim frame of 45mm x 15mm profile. My concern was that the weight would cause the glue on the hinged edge to part from the wood and rip the frame apart. It hasn't moved a jot, the glue is that good!
 
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